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Mathematics 17 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

which of the following formulas calculates 45% of cell E19? A. =45%E19 b. =E19*45% C. =E19^45% D. =E19^.45

OpenStudy (anonymous):

You multiply each other I guess and then you are left with A as the answer.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

@jim_thompson5910 IS THIS RIGHT^^

OpenStudy (anonymous):

What's the difference between answer A and answer B?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

its answer B

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Why?

jimthompson5910 (jim_thompson5910):

B is the closest to what I got, I would have done =E19*0.45, but apparently excel knows how to convert 45% to 0.45

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Why can't it be A?

jimthompson5910 (jim_thompson5910):

it can't be A because I get an error when I try that in excel, but different versions of excel may allow that syntax (not sure)

jimthompson5910 (jim_thompson5910):

but choice B works just fine for me

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Oh gotach it's for ecel

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I didn't know excel converted percent to decimal :D

jimthompson5910 (jim_thompson5910):

same here, learn something new everyday

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I think Excel does basic functions only so it doesn't understand what .45E19 is

OpenStudy (anonymous):

it's the same thing as to tell someone just learning math that .45x^2 is actually .45*x^2

OpenStudy (anonymous):

i'm pretty sure it's the same thing with c++

OpenStudy (anonymous):

which of the following keyboard shorcuts will copy into memory the text upi have highlighted with your cursor but leave the text in the original document? A. ctrl+c B. ctrl+p C. ctrl+v D. ctrl+x do you know this @Outkast3r09

OpenStudy (anonymous):

v

jimthompson5910 (jim_thompson5910):

hint: cntrl+c is copy, but you want cut

OpenStudy (anonymous):

ctrl+v is copy

jimthompson5910 (jim_thompson5910):

ctrl+v is paste

OpenStudy (anonymous):

ctrl+c is cut

OpenStudy (anonymous):

ctrl+p is paste

jimthompson5910 (jim_thompson5910):

that would be print

OpenStudy (anonymous):

not for my computer what the heck lol

OpenStudy (anonymous):

haha lol

OpenStudy (anonymous):

it could be a program overwriting it also

jimthompson5910 (jim_thompson5910):

maybe, or you just have a very odd computer

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes lol cause i remember i used to play games as a kid in which you couldn't print lol

OpenStudy (anonymous):

so it might be possibly that

OpenStudy (anonymous):

or possibly i think i'm hitting v but i'm hitting c lol

OpenStudy (anonymous):

it's all nature to me by now -.-

OpenStudy (anonymous):

and Jim whiley ou're here explain how non uniform density is derived to be \[p=\frac{dm}{dv}\]

OpenStudy (anonymous):

\[p(r)=\frac{dm}{dv}\]

jimthompson5910 (jim_thompson5910):

no idea, sry you might have better luck in physics?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

lol isn't it calculus tho?

jimthompson5910 (jim_thompson5910):

oh idk, it's been a while for me

OpenStudy (anonymous):

how do you think of it though? if p(r) is a given small point of mass

jimthompson5910 (jim_thompson5910):

p(r) is the density at point r? not sure

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes p(r) is a function for getting a small mass point in a path

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